London by 1800 was the greatest city in the world and at the center of
the world's greatest empire. This book demonstrates that London was also
at the heart of the Industrial Revolution--a major engine of Britain's
world-wide economic domination. Traditional historiography has regarded
London as a minor player in the Industrial Revolution--""a storm that
passed over London and broke elsewhere""--but this book, together with
other more recent studies, argued that London, in addition to providing
financial and other essential service skills, was at the forefront of
industrial development. The book builds on and refines earlier works and
shows how London became the hub of the Industrial revolution as a result
of a huge and diverse range of manufactures and its drawing together a
number of other vital factors making for dynamic growth: these included
stimulating dynamism of smaller firms with rapid response to a changing
market conditions, as well as the growth of larger enterprises. This
study is unique in being based on hard data based, for example, on
contemporary insurance records and trade directories, and it provides a
rich mine of information for research as well as giving a vivid picture
of London during the period of rapid and unprecedented development as
the world's first great modern industrial city at the center of a
national industrial economy.